Next week, 16 December 2009, I am giving a three hour tutorial at JURIX (International Conference on Legal Knowledge and Information Systems) in Rotterdam, The Netherlands on Natural Language Processing Techniques for Managing Legal Resources on the Semantic Web. The tutorial description appears below. Further material from the tutorial will be presented on the blog.
Legal resources such as legislation, public notices, and case law are increasingly available on the internet. To be automatically processed by web services, the resources must be annotated using semantic web technologies such as XML, RDF, and ontologies. However, manual annotation is labour and knowledge intensive. Using natural language processing techniques and systems (NLP), a significant portion of these resources can be automatically annotated. In this tutorial, we outline the motivations and objectives of NLP, give an overview of several accessible systems (General Architecture on Text Engineering, C&C/Boxer, Attempto Controlled English), provide examples of processing legal resources, and discuss future directions in this area.
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